Curry School of Education and Human Development, University of Virginia, 405 Emmet Street, Charlottesville, VA, 22904, United States.
Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, CB 8180, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, United States.
Res Dev Disabil. 2020 May;100:103631. doi: 10.1016/j.ridd.2020.103631. Epub 2020 Mar 20.
The planning behaviors of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) during writing remain overlooked. Targeted examination of planning behaviors may help to better understand their heterogeneous writing skills.
This study examined overt planning behaviors of three groups of school-age children (ASD, ADHD, and typically developing [TD]) during the planning stage of a standardized narrative writing assessment. Aims explored group differences in time spent planning, between- and within-group differences in overt planning behaviors, and relationships between planning behaviors and writing performance as well as age, cognitive skills, and diagnostic symptom severity.
This study included 121 9-17-year-old children (60 ASD, 32 ADHD, and 29 TD). Video recordings captured overt planning behaviors during a two-minute prewriting planning stage.
Not all participants planned, but group membership overwhelmingly did not influence planning likelihood. Groups differed in time spent engaging with the outline (29 %-70 %), with the TD group spending the most time. Groups spent similar amounts of time looking away from the task (< 10 %) and looking at the task picture (20 %-33 %). The TD and ASD groups demonstrated more similar within-group-level differences in planning behavior s, while the ADHD group appeared more variable. The ADHD and TD groups but not the ASD group showed stronger associations between planning behaviors and writing performance.
Children with ASD and ADHD differed relative to each other and to TD peers in specific planning behaviors. Implications are discussed regarding instructional practices and needed future research to examine planning during writing in children with developmental disabilities.
自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)和注意缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)儿童在写作过程中的计划行为仍未被关注。有针对性地检查计划行为可以帮助更好地理解他们不同的写作技能。
本研究考察了三组学龄儿童(ASD、ADHD 和典型发育[TD])在标准化叙事写作评估的计划阶段的外显计划行为。目的是探讨在计划时间、组间和组内的外显计划行为差异、计划行为与写作表现以及年龄、认知技能和诊断症状严重程度之间的关系。
本研究纳入了 121 名 9-17 岁的儿童(60 名 ASD、32 名 ADHD 和 29 名 TD)。视频记录捕捉了在两分钟的预写计划阶段中儿童的外显计划行为。
并非所有参与者都进行了计划,但组间差异并未显著影响计划的可能性。各组在使用大纲的时间上存在差异(29%-70%),TD 组花费的时间最多。各组花在任务之外(<10%)和任务图片上(20%-33%)的时间相似。TD 和 ASD 组在计划行为方面表现出更相似的组内差异,而 ADHD 组则表现出更多的变化。ADHD 组和 TD 组而不是 ASD 组显示出计划行为与写作表现之间更强的关联。
ASD 和 ADHD 儿童与其他儿童(包括 TD 儿童)在特定的计划行为上存在差异。讨论了关于教学实践的意义以及需要进一步研究以检查发育障碍儿童在写作过程中的计划行为。